Short Fiction Mack Reynolds (best ereader for pdf and epub .txt) đ
- Author: Mack Reynolds
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Demming closed his eyes.
Rostoff said, âLieutenant, itâs a dog-eat-dog society. If we eventually lick the Kradens, one of the very reasons will be because weâre a dog-eat-dog society. Every man for himself and the devil take the hindmost. Our apologists dream up some beautiful gobbledygook phrases for it, such as free enterprise, but actually itâs dog-eat-dog. Surprisingly enough, it works, or at least has so far. Right now, the human race needs the radioactives of the Jupiter satellites. In acquiring them, somebody is going to make a tremendous amount of money. Why shouldnât it be us?â
âWhy not, if youâ âor weâ âcan do it honestly?â
Demmingâs grunt was nearer a snort this time.
Rostoff said sourly, âDonât be naive, Lieutenant. Whoever does it, is going to need little integrity. You donât win in a sharperâs card game by playing your cards honestly. The biggest sharper wins. Weâve just found a joker somebody dropped on the floor; if we donât use it, weâre suckers.â
Demming opened his pig eyes and said, âAll this is on the academic side. We checked your background thoroughly before approaching you, Mathers. We know your record, even before you entered the Space Service. Just between the three of us, wouldnât you like out? There are a full billion men and women in our armed forces, you can be spared. Letâs say youâve already done your share. Canât you see the potentialities in spending the rest of your life with the Galactic Medal of Honor in your pocket?â
It was there all right, drifting slowly. Had he done a more thorough job of his patrol, last time, he should have stumbled upon it himself.
If he had, there was no doubt that he would have at first reported it as an active enemy cruiser. Demming and Rostoff had been right. The Kraden ship looked untouched by battle.
That is, if you approached it from the starboard and slightly abaft the beam. From that angle, in particular, it looked untouched.
It had taken several circlings of the craft to come to that conclusion. Don Mathers was playing it very safe. This thing wasnât quite so simple as the others had thought. He wanted no slip-ups. His hand went to a food compartment and emerged with a space thermo which should have contained fruit juice, but didnât. He took a long pull at it.
Finally he dropped back into the position heâd decided upon, and flicked the switch of his screen.
A base lieutenantâs face illuminated it. He yawned and looked questioningly at Don Mathers.
Don said, allowing a touch of excitement in his voice, âMathers, Scout V-102, Sector A22-K223.â
âYeah, yeahâ ââ âŠâ the other began, still yawning.
âIâve spotted a Kraden cruiser. Miro class, I think.â
The lieutenant flashed into movement. He slapped a button before him, the screen blinked, to be lit immediately again.
A gray-haired Fleet Admiral looked up from papers on his desk.
âYes?â
Don Mathers rapped, âMiro class Kraden in sector A22-K223, sir. Iâm lying about fifty miles off. Undetected thus farâ âI think. He hasnât fired on me yet, at least.â
The Admiral was already doing things with his hands. Two subalterns came within range of the screen, took orders, dashed off. The Admiral was rapidly firing orders into two other screens. After a moment, he looked up at Don Mathers again.
âHang on, Lieutenant. Keep him under observation as long as you can. Whatâre your exact coordinates?â
Don gave them to him and waited.
A few minutes later the Admiral returned to him. âLetâs take a look at it, Lieutenant.â
Don Mathers adjusted the screen to relay the Kraden cruiser. His palms were moist now, but everything was going to plan. He wished that he could take another drink.
The Admiral said, âMiro class, all right. Donât get too close, Lieutenant. Theyâll blast you to hell and gone. Weâve got a task force within an hour of you. Just hang on.â
âYes, sir,â Don said. An hour. He was glad to know that. He didnât have much time in which to operate.
He let it go another five minutes, then he said, âSir, theyâre increasing speed.â
âDamn,â the Admiral said, then rapid fired some more into his other screens, barking one order after another.
Don said, letting his voice go very flat, âIâm going in, sir. Theyâre putting on speed. In another five minutes theyâll be underway to the point where I wonât be able to follow. Theyâll get completely clear.â
The Admiral looked up, startled. âDonât be a fool.â
âTheyâll get away, sir.â Knowing that the other could see his every motion, Don Mathers hit the cocking lever of his flakflak gun with the heel of his right hand.
The Admiral snapped, âLet it go, you fool. You wonât last a second.â Then, his voice higher, âThatâs an order, Lieutenant!â
Don Mathers flicked off his screen. He grimaced sourly and then descended on the Kraden ship, his flakflak gun beaming it. He was going to have to expend every erg of energy in his Scout to burn the other ship up to the point where his attack would look authentic, and to eliminate all signs of previous action.
The awarding of the Galactic Medal of Honor, as always, was done in the simplest of ceremonies.
Only the President and Captain Donal Mathers himself were present in the formerâs office in the Presidential Palace.
However, as they both knew, every screen in the Solar System was tuned into the ceremony.
Don Mathers saluted and stood to attention.
The President read the citation. It was very short, as Medal of Honor citations were always.
⊠for conspicuous gallantry far and beyond the call of duty, in which you single-handedly, and against unbelievable odds, attacked and destroyed an enemy cruiser while flying a Scout armed only with a short-beam flakflak gunâ ââ âŠ
He pinned a small bit of ribbon and metal to Don Mathersâ tunic. It was an inconspicuous, inordinately ordinary medal, the Galactic Medal of Honor.
Don said hoarsely, âThank you, sir.â
The President shook hands with him and said, âI am President of the United Solar System, Captain Mathers, supposedly the highest rank
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